983 research outputs found
Improving children's behaviour and attendance through the use of parenting programmes: an examination of good practice
There is powerful evidence that attendance at school and academic performance are positively related and that those who are excluded and do not attend school regularly, whatever the reasons, are more likely to become involved in crime. Recently, much emphasis has been put on the role that parents can play in improving the attendance and behaviour of their children. The Anti-Social Behaviour Act 2003 introduced new powers for Local Education Authorities (LEAs) to apply for a parenting order to help address children's behaviour in school. This court order compels a parent to attend a parenting programme and to fulfil other requirements as determined necessary by the court for improving their child's behaviour
The problems of offenders with mental disorders: A plurality of perspectives within a single mental health care organisation
Managers, doctors, nurses, occupational therapists, social workers, psychologists, unqualified staff and service users were interviewed for a qualitative study of risk management and rehabilitation in an inner city medium secure forensic mental health care unit. Different professional orientations to service user problems were identified. Doctors focused primarily on the diagnosis of mental disorder, which they managed mainly through pharmaceutical interventions. Psychologists were principally concerned with personal factors, for example service user insight into their biographical history. Occupational therapists concentrated mainly on daily living skills, and social workers on post-discharge living arrangements. Some front line nurses, held accountable for security lapses, adopted a criminogenic approach. Service users were more likely than professionals to understand their needs in terms of their wider life circumstances. These differences are explored qualitatively in relation to four models of crossdisciplinary relationships: monoprofessional self-organisation combined with restricted communication; hermeneutic reaching out to other perspectives; the establishment of interdisciplinary sub-systems; and transdisciplinary merger. Relationships between professions working in this unit, as portrayed in qualitative interviews, corresponded mainly to the first model of monoprofessional self-organisation. Reasons for restricted crossdisciplinary understanding, particularly the wide power/status differences between the medical and other professions, and between staff and patients, are discussed
No evidence for a direct role of HLA-B27 in pathological bone formation in axial SpA
The strong genetic association between HLA-B27 and ankylosing spondylitis has been known for over 40 years. HLA-B27 positivity is possibly associated with severity of ankylosis. We studied the in vitro and in vivo impact of HLA-B27 in models of chondrogenesis and osteogenesis.status: publishe
Contextualising empowerment practice: negotiating the path to becoming using participatory video processes
Participation and empowerment are major drivers of social policy, but participatory
projects often happen within contested territory. This research interrogates the
assumed participation-empowerment link through the example of participatory video.
Fieldwork unpacks the particular approach of Real Time, an established UK project
provider. Disrupting representational framing, the emergent relational processes
catalysed were explored in context, to address not whether participatory video can
increase participants’ influence, but how and in what circumstances. This thesis
therefore builds more nuanced understanding of empowerment practice as the
negotiated (rhizomic) pathway between social possibility and limitation.
Following Deleuze, a becoming ontology underpinned study of project actors’
experiences of the evolving group processes that occurred. An action research design
incorporated both collaborative sense-making and disruptive gaze. Analysis draws on
interpersonal and observational data gathered purposively from multiple perspectives in
11 Real Time projects between 2006 and 2008. Five were youth projects and six with
adults, two were women-only and one men-only, two with learning-disabled adults and
four aimed at minority-ethnic participants.
Participatory video as facilitated empowerment practice led to new social
becoming by opening conducive social spaces, mediating interactions, catalysing group
action and re-positioning participants. Videoing as performance context had a
structuring and intensifying function, but there were parallel risks such as inappropriate
exposure when internal and external dialogical space was confused. A rhizomic map of
Real Time’s non-linear practice territory identifies eight key practice balances, and
incorporates process possibilities, linked tensions, and enabling and hindering factors at
four main sequential stages. Communicative action through iteratively progressing
video activities unfolded through predictable transitions to generate a diversifying
progression from micro to mezzo level when supported. This thesis thus shows how
participatory video is constituted afresh in each new context, with the universal and
particular in ongoing dynamic interchange during the emergent empowerment journey
Towards An Intersectional Praxis In Design
This research engages with how design and designers might engage with
Intersectionality and why this practice is integral to the field. It offers critique, criticality, and proposed models to the field of design. Through the use of a feminist standpoint autoethenographic method as a strategy this research aims to meet the objective of identifying frustrations within studying in the Strategic Foresight and Innovation program, and working as a designer in order to address gaps in design pedagogy and practice, while speaking from an underrepresented experience within the design field.
Research is presented through academic writing, flow of consciousness essays, zine making, communication design, and speculative desig
Exploring Strategies in Website Development in Human-Computer Interaction for Older Adults Over 65: A Case Study
Human-computer interaction (HCI) website developers often lack the understanding necessary to build interfaces to meet accessibility requirements for older adults over 65. Adults over 65 often have difficulty using computer technology to access information over the Internet and are slow to adapt because websites are not fully accessible to older adults. Grounded in the technology acceptance model, the purpose of this qualitative multiple-case study was to explore strategies that HCI website developers use to build interfaces to meet accessibility requirements for older adults over 65. The participants were four HCI website developers from four website development companies in the New York City metropolitan area of the United States. Data were collected using semi-structured interviews and organizational documents. Using thematic analysis, the major themes found were ease of readability and accessibility, ease of navigation and simplicity, and the importance of feedback. A key recommendation is for web designers and developers to use best practices and guidelines identified by the World Wide Web Consortium to create accessible websites for adults over 65. The implications for positive social change include the potential to improve the number of websites that are easier to use for older adults, thus providing benefits to older adults by enriching their worlds, allowing their families to use distance communication to interact with them, and affording health providers with an avenue to have more contact with the older adults
The problems of offenders with mental disorders: A plurality of perspectives within a single mental health care organisation
Managers, doctors, nurses, occupational therapists, social workers, psychologists, unqualified staff and service users were interviewed for a qualitative study of risk management and rehabilitation in an inner city medium secure forensic mental health care unit. Different professional orientations to service user problems were identified. Doctors focused primarily on the diagnosis of mental disorder, which they managed mainly through pharmaceutical interventions. Psychologists were principally concerned with personal factors, for example service user insight into their biographical history. Occupational therapists concentrated mainly on daily living skills, and social workers on post-discharge living arrangements. Some front line nurses, held accountable for security lapses, adopted a criminogenic approach. Service users were more likely than professionals to understand their needs in terms of their wider life circumstances. These differences are explored qualitatively in relation to four models of crossdisciplinary relationships: monoprofessional self-organisation combined with restricted communication; hermeneutic reaching out to other perspectives; the establishment of interdisciplinary sub-systems; and transdisciplinary merger. Relationships between professions working in this unit, as portrayed in qualitative interviews, corresponded mainly to the first model of monoprofessional self-organisation. Reasons for restricted crossdisciplinary understanding, particularly the wide power/status differences between the medical and other professions, and between staff and patients, are discussed
Abdominal obesity and other risk factors largely explain the high CRP in Indigenous Australians relative to the general population, but not gender differences: a cross-sectional study
Background: Previous studies reported high C-reactive protein (CRP) levels in Indigenous Australians, which may contribute to their high risk of cardiovascular disease. We compared CRP levels in Indigenous Australians and the general population, accounting for obesity and other risk factors.Methods: Cross-sectional study of CRP and risk factors (weight, height, waist and hip circumferences, blood pressure, lipids, blood glucose, and smoking status) in population-based samples from the Diabetes and Related conditions in Urban Indigenous people in the Darwin region (DRUID) study, and the Australian Diabetes, Obesity and Lifestyle study (AusDiab) follow-up.Results: CRP concentrations were higher in women than men and in DRUID than AusDiab. After multivariate adjustment, including waist circumference, the odds of high CRP (>3.0 mg/L) in DRUID relative to AusDiab were no longer statistically significant, but elevated CRP was still more likely in women than men. After adjusting for BMI (instead of waist circumference) the odds for elevated CRP in DRUID participants were still higher relative to AusDiab participants among women, but not men. Lower HDL cholesterol, impaired glucose tolerance (IGT), and higher diastolic blood pressure were associated with having a high CRP in both men and women, while current smoking was associated with high CRP in men but not women.Conclusions: High concentrations of CRP in Indigenous participants were largely explained by other risk factors, in particular abdominal obesity. Irrespective of its independence as a risk factor, or its aetiological association with coronary heart disease (CHD), the high CRP levels in urban Indigenous women are likely to reflect increased vascular and metabolic risk. The significance of elevated CRP in Indigenous Australians should be investigated in future longitudinal studies
- …
